Solution to the Gas Crisis: Nationalize American Oil Companies

EXXON just made record profits in the first quarter 2008 - $11 Billion, meanwhile we’re laying off teachers and can’t get the pot holes filled

SAN DIEGO — I keep wondering how much Americans are willing to pay for gas. At the “cheap” ARCO here in Ocean Beach, it’s $3.83 a gallon for the cheapest gas. I see $3.89, $3.99 and above $4 everywhere. Just how much are we willing to pay? $5.00? I don’t know. But I do know this: the giant oil companies are raking it in with record profits - and they’ve been doing this over these last few years.

Consider EXXON MOBILE. I wrote a post about how top executives from the five oil giants–including EXXON– testified in front of Congress back in early April that, despite their combined $123 Billion profits for 2007, they should continue to receive their tax breaks. EXXON alone made a record $40.6 Billion profit in 2007.

Now EXXON is announcing record earnings for the first quarter of this year! EXXON, one of the top oil corporations in the country, took in nearly $11 Billion in profits, just this first quarter. It did this with a mind-altering $117 Billion in revenues! That is up 17% from the same quarter last year. So, last year–2007–the company made record profits. Today it’s making even bigger record profits! Do the math: $17 Billion x 4 = $68 Billion! [Go here for more details.]

Now think of all the things that need money. Not only those pot holes along Cable Street and every other street, but how about the teachers and other public school workers who have received pink slips. The State of California may have up to a $20 Billion deficit. Think of all your medical bills that wouldn’t be there if we had some kind of universal health care system, like all the other “enlightened” industrialized countries have. Think of all your education and schooling bills, unpaid school loans, things that wouldn’t be there if we had some sort of universal college system, like many other “enlightened” countries.

From pot-holes to fired teachers to medical and school bills, our government and system is in sad shape. The government-the entire system-is out of money. Financial resources are desperately needed just to simply patch up the minimum of what’s expected of government.

It is within this context, that I propose the following:

Nationalize the American oil companies

Take over the native oil companies, hire managers and workers at fair salaries, invest in non-carbon energy resources, and then take those profit revenues from the private pockets and use them for the public good. Use those revenues to pay for the pot-holes, the teachers, the State budget, a health care system–and the many other things we need, like non-polluting energy sources, a plan to deal with global warming, food and housing within our means ….

Nationalize the oil companies. Why not? Other utilities are public. What’s oil? Chopped liver? Oil is a public, national (not to mention international) resource, like water, like electricity, like the mail, like social security, and it deserves to be publicly-owned, or at least, heavily, publicly regulated.

This is not a loopy, far-out, far-left extreme proposition. It is a practical, logical idea. An idea of efficiency. Consider it. Here’s a definition of “nationalization” from Wikipedia:

Nationalization, also spelled nationalisation, is the act of taking an industry or assets into the public ownership of a national government. Nationalization usually refers to private assets, but may also mean assets owned by lower levels of government, such as municipalities. The opposite of nationalization is usually privatization or de-nationalisation, but may also be municipalization. A renationalization occurs when state-owned assets are privatized and later nationalized again, often when a different political party or faction is in power. A renationalization process may also be called reverse privatization.

The motives for nationalization are political as well as economic. It is a central theme of certain brands of ’state socialist’ policy that the means of production, distribution and exchange, should be owned by the state. Socialists believe that public ownership enables people to exercise full democratic control over the means whereby they earn their living and provides an effective means of redistributing wealth and income more equitably.

Nationalized industries, charged with operating in the public interest, may be under strong political and social pressures to give much more attention to externalities. They may be obliged to operate some loss making activities where social benefits are clearly greater than social costs - for example, rural, postal and transport services. As an instance, the U.S. Mail is guaranteed its nationalised status by the Constitution. The government has recognized these social obligations and, in some cases, provides subsidies for such non-commercial operations.

Since the nationalised industries are state owned, the government is responsible for meeting any debts incurred by these industries. The nationalized industries do not normally borrow from the domestic market other than for short-term borrowing.

Nationalization may occur with or without compensation to the former owners. If it takes place without compensation it is a case of expropriation. Nationalization is distinguished from property redistribution in that the government retains control of nationalized property. Some nationalizations take place when a government seizes property acquired illegally. For example, the French government seized the car-makers Renault because its owners had collaborated with the Nazi occupiers of France.

The Wikipedia site also has a long list of notable nationalizations by country. Britain-our close ally-has an impressive list.

I know this flies in the face of recent trends of “privatization,” but those have gone too far. It’s our oil, and we should manage it, and we, the people, should profit by it. Again, oil, like water, is a public resource. I’m not an economist, but I can do the math.

Vermont Peace Activists Occupy General Dynamics Weapons Plant

Activists on May Day locked themselves together in the firm’s lobby to protest the company’s war profiteering.

By Benjamin Dangl / AlterNet / May 5, 2008.
On May 1st, International Workers’ Day, ten peace activists in Burlington, Vermont entered General Dynamics and locked themselves together in the main lobby of the building in protest against the company’s weapons manufacturing and war profiteering. University of Vermont student Benjamin Dube, one of the dozens of other activists present at the event, leaned out a window of the lobby, and pointed to the GD building, explaining, “This is the gas tank of the war machine, and we are the sugar.”

The demonstrators entered the lobby at around 3 pm, and proceeded to lock their arms together with PVC piping, duct tape and other materials. According to a press release put out by the group, the activists were demanding that “General Dynamics stop giving campaign contributions to the politicians responsible for regulating it, stop making Gatling guns, missiles and other weapons of mass destruction and give back the $3.6 million dollars in Vermont tax breaks General Dynamics received in 2007.”

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The loathsome smearing of Israel’s critics

by Johann Hari / The Independent / May 8, 2008

In the US and Britain, there is a campaign to smear anybody who tries to describe the plight of the Palestinian people. It is an attempt to intimidate and silence - and to a large degree, it works. There is nobody these self-appointed spokesmen for Israel will not attack as anti-Jewish: liberal Jews, rabbis, even Holocaust survivors.

My own case isn’t especially important, but it illustrates how the wider process of intimidation works. I have worked undercover at both the Finsbury Park mosque and among neo-Nazi Holocaust deniers to expose the Jew-hatred there; when I went on the Islam Channel to challenge the anti-Semitism of Islamists, I received a rash of death threats calling me “a Jew-lover”, “a Zionist-homo pig” and more.

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Reflections on May Day in Olympia, Washington

by Peter Bohmer / May 3, 2008

The planning for the Olympia May Day and the resulting rally and march were a very worthwhile effort to connect the anti-war movement and GI resistance to the immigrant rights struggle within the context of the celebration of May Day–International Worker’s day. I am very appreciative and supportive of the centering the May Day rally and march around the Sanctuary City proposal, possibly the first such proposal in the country that calls for a city to be a sanctuary for both GI’s and immigrants. We need to connect issues and movements more as happened on May Day in Olympia. The rally and march was an excellent way to put this proposal for Olympia as a sanctuary in the public consciousness, the organizers of the May Day event deserve a lot of credit for this.

Sadly the message was lost to much of the Olympia community because of the actions of a few, none of whom as far as I know were involved in organizing the May Day event. The issue of graffiti on the Capitol walls or breaking bank windows is not primarily an abstract or moral issue of right or wrong, and some of the discussion has been focused on that. I do think that the rock throwing was morally objectionable because bank employees and customers were in the two banks and could have been injured when the rocks were thrown. My main criticism of the graffiti and window breaking is rather, that it is bad and wrong strategy and tactics within the context of 2008 Olympia. How do these acts by a few, a self-appointed vanguard, build the anti-war or immigrant rights movement? They don’t!! If a response is that they build some other movement, e.g., Black Bloc, that is opportunist as one is using other movements to build one’s own.

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Soldiers Say Porn Ban May Hurt Morale

by Seth Robson / Stars and Stripes / May 05, 2008
GRAFENWOHR, Germany — Legislation that would restrict the sale of certain men’s magazines on U.S. military bases around the world would be bad for morale, according to soldiers at Grafenwöhr.U.S. Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., has introduced legislation that would close a loophole in the current law that allows the sale of some sexually explicit material on military bases by lowering the threshold required to deem material “sexually explicit.”

A Department of Defense committee that reviews materials sold on bases ruled last year that magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse are not pornographic. But Broun’s Military Honor and Decency Act includes language that could make those magazines eligible for the ban.

The prospect of missing out on men’s magazines was not welcomed by soldiers at Grafenwöhr.

“We all read ‘em,” said Pfc. Paul Rubio, 31, of Bakersfield, Calif. “There are times we just read ‘em for the technological parts like the new gadgets that come out. They have good stories sometimes too.”

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Marjorie Cohn’s Testimony on Torture Before the House Judiciary Committee

From the Department of Justice to Guantánamo Bay: Administration Lawyers and Administration Interrogation Rules

On Tuesday, May 6, 2008, San Diego’s own Marjorie Cohn testified before the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, DC. Ms. Cohn is not only a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego, but also the president of the National Lawyers Guild.

Testimony of Marjorie Cohn

What does torture have in common with genocide, slavery, and wars of aggression? They are all jus cogens. Jus cogens is Latin for “higher law” or “compelling law.” This means that no country can ever pass a law that allows torture. There can be no immunity from criminal liability for violation of a jus cogens prohibition.

The United States has always prohibited the use of torture in our Constitution, laws executive statements and judicial decisions. We have ratified three treaties that all outlaw torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. When the United States ratifies a treaty, it becomes part of the Supreme Law of the Land under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution.

The Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, says, “No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification for torture.”

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No on 98, Yes on 99 Rally In San Francisco

by Michael Steinberg / Wednesday May 7th, 2008

Opponents of Proposition 98 rallied at Civic Center Park in San Francisco today to urge people to vote against the measure, which would outlaw rent control and other tenant protections statewide. Today is the first day voters can cast their ballots in the June 3 state election.

San Francisco, May 7-On the first day voters could cast their ballots in the June 3 election, opponents of Proposition 98 rallied at Civic Center Park early this afternoon.

Some were wearing cardboard boxes bearing messages like “June 4 Affordable Housing Option.”

Ted Gullicksen of the San Francisco Tenants Union told the crowd, “We’re here to oppose Prop 98, which will eliminate rent control in San Francisco and all over California. It would also erase just cause eviction protections. This would cause the displacement of tens of thousands of tenants in San Francisco.

“It’s very important to spread the word about Prop 98. 80% of the money for 98 comes from landlords. It’s posed as a protection from eminent domain for property owners, but its real hidden agenda is to devastate rent control.

“We are a city of renters. If Prop 98 passes, this city would become a city not just for the wealthy, but only for the very, very, very wealthy. We would lose our diversity.”

Gullicksen said opponents of 98 include Governor Schwarzenegger, Mayor Newsome, and the California Chamber of Commerce.

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Students and Parents Protest San Diego State Drug Bust With Mock Graduation Ceremony

Groups Call for Life Saving Good Samaritan Policy

SAN DIEGO, CA; SDSU students and a group of concerned parents will hold a mock graduation ceremony with 77 “missing” students today in protest of Tuesday’s announcement of a massive drug sting orchestrated by the DEA with the help of SDSU officials. Officials have described the five-month sting as a response to two recent fatal drug overdoses on campus, but those gathered today are criticizing the DEA’s show of force as counterproductive and are calling on the university to enact a life-saving Good Samaritan Policy that encourages students to call for help during a drug overdose emergency.

Todays demonstration, organized by Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), A New PATH (Parents for Addiction Treatment & Healing), and the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA), will display 77 empty chairs and diplomas, symbolizing the 75 students arrested in the sting, as well as the two students who died recently of preventable drug overdoses. Large banners will be hoisted that read: 77 students are gone, but drug abuse isn’t and Save lives. Enact a Good Samaritan Policy.

WHO: Dozens of concerned students and parents

WHAT: Demonstration and press conference supporting Good Samaritan

Policies and criticizing DEA sting at SDSU

WHEN: 11am, Wednesday May 7th, 2008

WHERE: SDSU, Hepner Hall/Communication Building

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Four of us were arrested in Kent, Ohio on Sunday May 4, 2008

By Yvette Coil

I tried to think of a way to open this letter without sounding as if we invented the wheel on “how to get arrested protesting.” So please don’t think that’s what I’m writing about.
It has taken me a long while to type this out, as my right arm, my writing hand, has a pinched nerve from the zip ties that were put on me Sunday.

Four of us were arrested Sunday; Aaron Brooks, Sable Foster, Bill Arthrell and myself. Bill is a Cleveland inner city history teacher, KSU graduate. He is fine and he can take care of himself and his court costs. Aaron and Sable are less fortunate in that they might not be able to take care of thier own court costs. That’s why I’m writing. Aaron is a local musician, a member of Kent State Anti-War Committee and a very good friend of mine. Sable is a KSU student and a member of KSU’s Womens Liberation Collective.

Both Aaron and Sable took a stand Sunday to say enough is enough in regards to war. Aaron, some of you might recall, played some music on the patio during the end of Winter Soldier. He was with me and the other 4 Kent State students who have family in the military, or are veterans themselves, that attended Winter Soldier in March.

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May 4th Kent State commemoration ends with arrests - Antiwar protesters refuse to leave Kent bridge

by Matt Fredmonsky and Dave O’Brien / May 5, 2008 / Record-Courier staff writers
An anti-war march and protest in downtown Kent following Sunday’s commemoration of the 38th anniversary of the May 4, 1970 shootings at Kent State University resulted in four arrests. Four protesters who sat down in the middle of Kent’s West Main Street bridge and refused to comply with the order of Kent police officers to clear the road were arrested and charged with failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer, a first-degree misdemeanor, according to a Kent Police Department press release.

The four arrested included Yvette Coil, a KSU conflict management major, organizer with the Cleveland chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War and wife of a veteran of the Gulf War; Aaron Brooks, a local musician; Bill Arthrell, a former KSU student and Cleveland resident; and an unidentified woman.

The march, organized by the Kent State Anti-War Committee and the Portage Peace Coalition, began on campus and proceeded west along East Main Street, stopping at the KSU U.S. Air Force ROTC building in the Terrace Annex to post paper peace signs on the doors. It continued on city sidewalks until it reached the corner of West Main Street and Franklin Avenue.

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